Gesture-Based Glove Interface



Remember how Tom Cruise's character in Minority Report was able to interact with a computer using gloves? MIT student Robert Wang has developed something similar.

Other prototypes of low-cost gestural interfaces have used reflective or colored tape attached to the fingertips, but “that’s 2-D information,” says Robert Wang, a graduate student in the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory who developed the new system together with Jovan Popovi?, an associate professor of electrical engineering and computer science. “You’re only getting the fingertips; you don’t even know which fingertip [the tape] is corresponding to.” Wang and Popovi?’s system, by contrast, can translate gestures made with a gloved hand into the corresponding gestures of a 3-D model of the hand on screen, with almost no lag time. “This actually gets the 3-D configuration of your hand and your fingers,” Wang says. “We get how your fingers are flexing.”

The most obvious application of the technology, Wang says, would be in video games: Gamers navigating a virtual world could pick up and wield objects simply by using hand gestures. But Wang also imagines that engineers and designers could use the system to more easily and intuitively manipulate 3-D models of commercial products or large civic structures.


Wang's team also made a pretty funny promotional video.

Link via Popular Science | Photo: Jason Dorfman/CSAIL

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The discussion at Metafilter referred to the "Stay Puft effect" meaning you might mistakenly think of pleasant things when you're supposed to bring up the bad memories, and therefore the good memories would be erased, too.
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This makes absolutely no sense to me, unless you are the type of person who remembers one thing and only one thing at a time. I might remember burning myself as a child, which might be nice to forget. But, with that forgetting, will I also lose the memories of mom taking care of me, my best friend walking me home, siblings concerns, and all else associated and intertwined with that memory?
In short, this sounds like a tidy little basis for fiction, but maybe not so great otherwise.
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